Hockey

'I Think Players Want To Be Pushed': Why Oilers Are Trying To Hire Mike Babcock

Somewhere along the way, Mike Babcock became the boogeyman.

He went from being viewed as one of the best coaches in the NHL to being one of the worst humans. In between winning a Stanley Cup and two Olympic gold medals, he got accused of verbally abusing Johan Franzen, of asking Mitch Marner to rank his teammates' work ethic and resigned from a job before even coaching a game for perusing another player's camera roll.

He's been called a bully and the poster child for mental health.

Despite all of this - and perhaps because of this - he might just become the coach of the Edmonton Oilers.

 Mike Babcock coached the Detroit Red Wings to the Stanley Cup in 2008. (Leon Halip-USA TODAY Sports)
Mike Babcock coached the Detroit Red Wings to the Stanley Cup in 2008. (Leon Halip-USA TODAY Sports) Leon Halip-USA TODAY Sports IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

"It's not coaching mistakes that Mike made, because he's done everything right on the ice," said Boudreau. "But the way he's treated players is not the right way. But again, that's his style."

It's an admittedly old-school style.

Some would suggest it's a style that doesn't work in today's NHL, where players are paid more than the coaches, and the power dynamic has shifted. Players are no longer told what to do. Instead, they are explained what they should do, usually with their self-interests in mind.

Players don't want to be yelled at. They don't want to be berated, humiliated and embarrassed.

At the same time, you'd be surprised what players will put up with if it means winning a championship.

It's often said that no player enjoyed playing for legendary coach Scotty Bowman, who was hated for 364 days of the year. The one day the players loved him was on the day when they raised the Cup.

That's what the Oilers are hoping for. More importantly, that's what McDavid and Draisaitl, who surely must have signed off on Babcock, are hoping for.

"Mike Babcock's not an idiot," former NHLer Mike Commodore, who played for Babcock in Detroit, said on the Jason Gregor Show. "Connor and Leon are going to get treated like gold. It's the third- and fourth-liners, the five-seven defensemen, the rookies, the arena staff, it's people like that who are going to be abused."

 Reports Link Mike Babcock To Edmonton Oilers' Coach Opening
Reports Link Mike Babcock To Edmonton Oilers' Coach Opening

Reports Link Mike Babcock To Edmonton Oilers' Coach Opening

Multiple reports have discussed the possibility of Mike Babcock coaching the Edmonton Oilers more than three years after resigning from the Columbus Blue Jackets.

Indeed, this is what desperation looks like. It's also what it looks like when the kids are sick of living in a messy house and are craving discipline.

The Oilers have tried the player-friendly coach. While they got close to winning a championship in 2024 and again in 2025, when they reached the final in both years, they came home with nothing to show for it.

This year was even worse. The Oilers made the playoffs, only to lose in the first round.

Along the way, there were suggestions the team lacked defensive structure. There were veiled shots at Knoblauch's defensive system and failure to clamp things down. At times, it seemed like McDavid was yelling more than the coaching staff.

So, potentially enter Babcock - for at least one or two years.

 If The Oilers Make Their Babcock Bed - They'll Have to Sleep In It
If The Oilers Make Their Babcock Bed - They'll Have to Sleep In It

If The Oilers Make Their Babcock Bed - They'll Have to Sleep In It

Desperate to win before Connor McDavid's clock runs out, Edmonton pivots from Bruce Cassidy to Mike Babcock, risking a toxic culture and the real possibility that this all goes terribly wrong.

With McDavid staring down free agency in 2027, this is a last-ditch effort to try something drastic and new, just like the Golden Knights did when they made a coaching change in the final three weeks of the season. It's also a chance to see if Babcock has learned from his time away from the game, as Joel Quenneville did after a suspension for his role in the Chicago Blackhawks sexual assault scandal.

Who knows? Maybe Babcock hasn't changed all that much. And who knows, maybe the Oilers are fine with that.

"I think players want to be pushed," Hall of Fame head coach Scotty Bowman once told me. "Good players do. The real top guys have said that. Nobody likes it, but I think players appreciate somebody who wants to get the most out of them. You have to be fair about it, but they want to be pushed to the limit."


 For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free.
For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free.

See more of The Hockey News on Google and save us as a preferred source. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com or creating your own post in our community forum.

The Hockey News

Get unlimited digital access
#ReadLocal

Try 1 month for $1

CLAIM OFFER